Poetry for Students

(WallPaper) #1
38 Poetry for Students

of Rilke’s birth was a railroad official—a job per-
haps owed to the influence of Josef’s well-to-do el-
der brother, Jaroslav. His mother, Sophie (Phia)
Entz Rilke, homely and socially ambitious, was the
daughter of a perfume manufacturer. Rilke was
their only child; a daughter, born before him, had
survived only a few days. The parents were di-
vorced before Rilke’s childhood was past. The epis-
tolary evidence indicates that Rilke was devoted to
his father, who was simple, gregarious, and a lady’s
man, but saw rather little of him, and that he nearly
detested his mother; yet it was the latter who en-
couraged his literary ambitions. The complexity of
his feelings for his mother may be indicated in his
early verse and stories by the appearance of a dream
mother, lovely and even desirable; his reaction to
Phia’s bigoted Roman Catholicism, the faith in
which he was reared, is reflected both in the am-
biguous allusions to a Roman Catholic world in his
early verse and Das Marien-Leben(1913; translated
asThe Life of the Virgin Mary, 1921) and in his
much-proclaimed dislike of Christianity. Rilke’s
snobbery, which led him to cling obstinately to a
family saga of age-old nobility, was encouraged by
the genealogical researches of his uncle Jaroslav
and by his mother’s pretensions and prejudices;
Phia Rilke was distinguished by her sense of ex-
traordinary refinement and by her contempt for
Jews and Czech speakers. Both the Rilkes and the
Entzes were “Prague Germans,” aware that they
were up against an ever more aggressive Slavic ma-
jority in a city where German speakers were con-
fronted, as the century wore on, by the rapid
weakening of their social and political position.
At ten, after an elementary education, much in-
terrupted by real or fancied illness, with the Piarist
Brothers, Rilke was sent to the military school at
Sankt Pölten in Lower Austria; save for summer
vacations he remained there until 1890, when he
was transferred to the military upper school at
Mährisch-Weißkirchen in Moravia. The abrupt
change from the cosseted existence at home to reg-
imented boarding-school life cannot have been
pleasant, even though his teachers encouraged him
to read his poems aloud to his fellow students. As
a young man Rilke planned to free himself from
“jenes böse und bange Jahrfünf” (that evil and
frightened half-decade) by writing a military-
school novel, and in a letter of 1920 he made an
extremely harsh reply to Major General von Sed-
lakowitz, his German teacher at Sankt Pölten, who
had written to congratulate him on his fame: “Als
ich in besonneneren Jahren... Dostojewskis Mem-
oiren aus einem Toten-Hause zuerst in die Hände

bekam, da wollte es mir scheinen, daßich in alle
Schrecknisse und Verzweifelungen des Bagno seit
meinem zehnen Jahre eingelassen gewesen sei”
(When, in years of greater reflection... I first got
hold of Dostoyevski’s Memoirs from the House of
the Dead, it seemed to me that I had been exposed
to all the terrors and despairs of the prison camp
from my tenth year on). After not quite a full year
at the second school, from which he emerged, he
told Sedlakowitz, “ein Erschöpfter, körperlich und
geistig Mißbrauchter” (exhausted, abused in body
and soul), he was discharged for reasons of health
and went back to Prague—only to show off by
wearing his cadet’s uniform and bragging about a
future return to the colors. His uncle Jaroslav then
sent him to a commercial academy at Linz, an ex-
perience about which he later wrote that investiga-
tions were pointless, since he had not been himself
at the time. Recent research indicates that he was
a would-be bon vivant who persuaded a children’s
nurse to run away with him to a hotel in Vienna.
In 1892 Jaroslav agreed to finance private in-
struction leading to the qualifying examination at
Prague’s German Charles-Ferdinand University, so
that one day Rilke could take over his uncle’s law
firm. Not that Jaroslav was at all confident about
the boy’s future: “Renés Phantasie ist ein Erbteil
seiner Mutter und durch ihren Einfluß, von Hause
aus krankhaft angeregt, durch unsystematisches
Lesen allerhand Bücher überheizt—[ist] seine Eit-
elkeit durch vorzeitiges Lob erregt” (René’s imag-
ination is an inheritance from his mother,
abnormally excited through her influence from the
very beginning, overheated by the unsystematic
reading of all sorts of books—his vanity has been
aroused by premature praise). Tutorial instruction
was congenial to Rilke’s temperament; by 1895 he
was ready to matriculate. He was already avidly
seeking an audience—his unbearably sentimental
first book, Leben und Lieder: Bilder und Tage-
buchblätter(Life and Songs), had come out in 1894,
dedicated to Valerie David-Rhonfeld, the niece of
the Czech poet Julius Zeyer (Valerie had financed
the book’s publication). The twenty-one artificially
simple poems of Wegwarten(Wild Chicory) ap-
peared in January 1896. At the end of the summer
of 1896 he moved to Munich, ostensibly for art his-
tory studies but with an eye to the cultural and pub-
lishing opportunities afforded by the Bavarian
capital, which was then Berlin’s equal as an artis-
tic center. By this time he had considerably better
proof of his lyric talent to display: Larenopfer(Of-
fering to the Lares, 1896), with its tributes to
Prague, was followed by Traumgekrönt: Neue

Childhood

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